Hosting package for Enterprise Resource Planning systems ?


I want to run my Enterprise Resource Planning systems so which hosting package will be suitable for me ?

Enterprise Resource Planning systems usually run on database servers much like CRM systems because they are database intensive applications. Much like CRM systems, ERP systems are not usually web based either and require a special client to connect to the application. ERP systems are used to help companies manage their resources from money to personnel to make the most of what they have.

Database hosting will be suitable for you.

Is free hosting really free?


Today, there are more choices than ever if you are looking for free hosting services. In fact, there are new companies popping up all the time offering some type of “free” hosting plans. Unfortunately, there are just as many companies going out of business and leaving their customers in a sort of hosting purgatory, unable to deliver the “free hosting for life” they had promised them and too often causing even more serious headaches.

With so many user complaints and horror stories surrounding free hosting, cpwebhosting.net decided to take a closer look and offer some insight for those considering it. So here’s the usual deal. To get “free” hosting, you must first pay a one-time setup fee that ranges from $35 to over $100 to transfer your domain. If you don’t already have a domain, you may also end up paying a premium of $35 or more for a new domain. You probably will also have to agree to become part of a forced advertising database, and receive daily email marketing, that your free host is selling to whomever they want. In return, you are promised “free hosting for life” that is restricted by how much disk space and monthly bandwidth you get. Your free host is hoping that you will exceed your allotted amount so they can upsell you to a paid hosting plan later.

Besides the fact that it’s not “free”, there are some other problems with this business model. To start with, your free host only gets paid by its customers one time – when they sign up – but they have to provide on-going service to them indefinitely. If for any reason new sales are down, there can be a big problem quick. Credit card fraud is also a costly problem for free hosting companies – it’s a favorite way for thieves to quickly check if a stolen card still works. To be profitable, a free host is dependent on a constant flow of enough setup fees from new customers. Which means they must keep operating costs low and advertising spending high. It’s important to understand how keeping their overhead as low as possible can directly affect the level of service that free hosts can provide their customers in the areas of uptime, security, data backup, customer service and tech support.

When it comes to uptime reliability, you want to be sure your free host owns their own servers. If your free host is actually reselling hosting on a third party’s servers and there is a problem, they may not be able to control when and how it gets fixed. Or worse, if there’s a dispute between your free host and the third party hosting company, your Web site may be left in limbo until it gets straightened out, which sometimes is never. Even if your free host owns their own servers, there can still be a big reliability problem if they haven’t devoted enough resources to maintenance and Internet security. Most free hosts are not going to pay for the expense of heavy duty, state-of-the-art firewall protection. You must be prepared for the possibility that you are vulnerable to hacker attacks that could easily bring down all of the sites they are hosting. And don’t rely on your free host to backup your site – make sure you have regular backups of everything you don’t want to lose.

When there is a problem, be prepared to be very patient for a response. Most free hosts only offer customer service and tech support via email. Keeping overhead low often means understaffing in these areas. Even if you have a serious problem such as your site being down for days or weeks, it’s highly unlikely that you would ever be able to speak to someone about it. If you want fast and efficient support, you’re much better off with a paid hosting provider. For this reason, only someone who is experienced and knowledgeable about the Web should consider free hosting since they are likely to need much less support. We don’t recommend free hosting for anyone who is new to the workings of the Internet.

free hosting business is a gamble, whether you are the provider or the customers. In any industry there are honest business people and not so honest ones and it’s the same with free hosting. Unfortunately, even the honest ones can’t guarantee they’ll be able to live up to the promise of “free hosting for life” in a business so full of potential problems.

Server or Dedicated Server


What is a Server or Dedicated Server?

A server or dedicated server in the hosting industry refers to
the actual computer that is running your website. So if you are using shared web hosting you are sharing one server with a lot of other people. If you have your own dedicated server you have a computer that is located at the data center and you are the only one using it. A server is just like your computer at home except it is usually in a smaller case, has a much faster connection to the internet, and doesn’t have some of the extras such as a powerful graphics card.

Shared Web Hosting For An Ecommerce Store


Hi,
I have a E-commerce website. can I use Shared Web Hosting For An Ecommerce Store.

I do not recommend using shared web hosting to run an ecommerce store for two reasons.
One, when you are sharing the server with other websites those sites can cause your pages to load slowly or even the entire server to crash. The second reason is that a shared server is a lot more susceptible to security problems and when you are running an online store that is charging and possibly storing credit cards that is not safe.

The Dangers Of Using Shared Web Hosting For An Ecommerce Store:-

Performance Concerns:- If you are running an ecommerce store you want it to be online near 100% of the time for both your customers and so search engines can find it. If you are down it can cause users to not trust the site and the obvious downside that they can’t buy anything. Similarly if search engines come across your store and it is down that can cause problems for the search engine optimization you are doing.

Security Concerns:- In a shared hosting environment you are more susceptible to security problems which is a big problem when you are running an ecommerce store. Shared web hosts usually make a profit by volume and not quality, this might mean they don’t have time to make sure all their servers are fully secure. You don’t want to wake up one day and find out that another user on your shared server was reading your files and got your database password and has all your store’s info and customer list.

Instead of sharing a server and its resources with lots of people I recommend getting a VPS or a dedicated server.

By getting a VPS or dedicated server you have full control of your web hosting environment and it can’t be affected by other people’s sites. It is also a nice bonus knowing that you have full control of a VPS or dedicated server can tweak or upgrade any software it is running.

Shared Web Hosting Sucks ?


My website is hosted on a Shared web hosting account but it has many problems. Why Shared Web Hosting Sucks ?

Because anyone on your shared server can crash your website and cause it problems!Then you have to wait for your hosting company to fix the problem and ban the offending site or give them another shot. Plus this can happen at anytime as any site can get dugg or slashdotted and cause all the people on one server problems.

Shared Web Hosting has many disadvantages so A VPS is a good start, it basically has software that splits up a server into individual emulated servers. In this environment the other sites are separate and can’t affect you.

A dedicated server is also an option as then you have an entire server for your site. If you can’t afford either of those options just finding more expensive shared hosting that doesn’t oversell as much will help. There are lots of shared hosts that are for programmers and they don’t oversell as much.

Tips For Not Getting Screwed By Your Web Host


Tired of getting ripped off by hosting companies? Here are some tips on how to avoid that fate!

1. Keep Your Domains Separate From Your Hosting Company
2. Diskspace and Bandwidth Are Marketing Terms
3. Test Support Before You Signup
4. Research The Host – Review Sites, Forums, and Blogs
5. Save Money With Hosting Coupons
6. Do Your Own Backups – Trust No One!
7. Use Paypal or a One Time Use Credit Card
8. Avoid Really Long Contracts Unless You Trust The Company
9. You Get What You Pay For – Don’t Stress!

Yes, u r rite.Too many people think they actually need 200GB of bandwidth and 50GB of diskspace to run their little blog. The numbers don’t matter anymore because hosting companies now offer more resources then you can actually use! They use these huge numbers to sucker you in and you just need to ignore them. You need to look at what really matter such as how good the hosting companies support is, their reputation, when and how their support is available, and what you need in terms of reliability versus what you are willing to pay. Don’t get suckered into a hosting company because they have bigger numbers then another.

If your site is important or even generating you income you need to do backups. I don’t care if your host says they are doing daily backups to a bunker 100 feet underground don’t trust them.

Use Paypal or a one time use credit card number to prevent your host from charging you even after you cancel. We get a few reviews each week where a person can’t get ahold of their host who is still charging them after they cancel. Small hosting companies might disappear and keep charging you but if you use Paypal or a one time use credit card number you hold the power!

Before you sign up for a host call them and/or get on live chat and make sure they are available and that they can answer some basic questions.

Hosting Company Is Perfect For Web Designers ?


Why Starting a Hosting Company Is Perfect For Web Designers ?

Starting a web hosting company is a perfect fit for a web designers. You already have access to clients who need web hosting and its a great way to receive recurring revenue and keep communication with past clients alive.

Top 5 Reasons Why Web Designers Should Start A Hosting Company:-

1. Recurring Revenue Steam With Little Marketing Work
2. Better Communication With Past Clients
3. Offer Additional Hosting Related Services Yourself or Outsource
4. A Hosting Company is a Sellable Asset
5. It is Super Easy To Start A Hosting Company

For designer it is easy to keep tabs on clients you are hosting and down the road its easier for them to contact you to order more design work. Plus you can do things like give clients coupons for your hosting to increase signups. And for your hosting clients you can use marketing emails to advertising your design services.

Anyone who is buying a web design is usually wanting a quality website you can charge more for your hosting since you will be personally dealing with them.

Avoid long term hosting contracts


You would think this would go without saying but daily on web hosting forums you read about someone who has signed up for a web hosting company for an entire year and is locked into the contract and having a hard time moving because of this. Be warned, try them out for a few months and then use a year espicially if their refund policy is lacking.

Yes, u r rite. Hosting companies discount their hosting packages for people signing up for a longer period because it gives them a large amount of revenue immediately and usually entices people to sign up. The problem is if the host goes bad or disappears you are stuck loosing money you pre paid. A good host will usually give a credit back but many hosts will not or and have that directly written into their terms of service that they don’t refund cancelled contracts.

If you are want to save money on a long term discount be sure to first try the host out for a few months and make sure that uptime and customer support are up to par. Then you can switch your account to a longer term and receive the discount knowing the hosting company you choose is a quality one.

Guide to DNS and DNS Terms


DNS stands for Domain Name Service or Domain Name System. It can also refer to one or more of the Domain Name Servers that make up the system. The Domain Name System is a huge distributed database that performs the important task of translating domain names into I.P. addresses

Domain Names vs. IP addresses
Every computer on the Internet has a unique I.P. address. For instance, the computer that currently hosts cpwebhosting.net has an I.P. address of 67.18.163.98. This type of address is perfectly suited for computers contacting other computers, but people don’t like to deal with long strings of numbers. Imagine if every web site you used on a regular basis had a 4 to 12 digit number you had to remember to access it! To solve this problem, memorable and/or guessable domain names are usually used to designate the computers that host web pages. Another advantage of domain names is that, unlike IP addresses, many domains can be hosted on one server. If that weren’t possible there would need to be a lot more servers in the world and reseller web hosting would be difficult at best. Using domains, however. creates a new problem; unlike I.P. addresses, domain names contain no information about the computer’s actual location on the Internet. So anytime someone requests a web page from the Internet the I.P. address is still needed. This is where the DNS comes in to play.

The Steps of a DNS Request
When someone tries to access your website with its domain name a request is sent to a local DNS server which is usually supplied by the ISP. This DNS server (and any other) can respond in one of two ways: if it already has the requested information, it transmits the IP address, if not it replies with the address of a DNS server that is more likely to have the information. The request now goes to an authoritative server for the top level domain. This server looks to find what name server is responsible for the second level domain. The domain registrar will typically maintain this server. At this point the name servers that registrants provide to their registrar are found and sent.

Really a good post

Some other DNS Terms are:-

Caching
This is obviously a lot of steps to go through and there are a huge number of requests happening every second. In order to reduce load on the system, it’s designers allowed for caching of DNS information. When a local DNS server finally finds the IP for a domain it stores it in a cache. How long this cache is used varies from location to location. There is also frequently caching at the browser and/or operating system levels. While caching makes the process much quicker and easier, it means that the information my not still be correct.

Propagation

The period of time after completing DNS changes with the registrar and before the DNS servers have quit using the old information is called Propagation. This is the main reason that changing servers can be such a headache for web hosts. The administrators of a DNS server can set the cache’s time to live (or TTL) and there is no set standard. Although the authoritative servers are usually updated more frequently, they can also provide another level of delay. Another factor is how recently you or someone nearby has requested the site. All of these factors mean that there is no way to know how long propagation will take, and it will happen sooner for some users than others. A worst-case scenario is 48 hours, but many administrators are starting to use shorter TTLs, and our experience is that most users will usually have to wait 3 to 18 hours. If you are waiting for a domain to resolve you may also want to flush the DNS cache on your local computer to make sure that that is not out of date.

Why You Should Avoid Free Website and Hosting Deals


Do a search for free websites or free hosting on Google and you’ll get 191,000,000 or more links to websites that offer this so called deal. If you are planning to setup a family site, with the latest news, photos of the kids etc, or you’re a genealogist and would like to post your family tree and information for other genealogists, and all the traffic you want or need is your family, friends and whatever strangers you happen to meet and would like to send to your URL, then by all means take advantage of their offer. Because that is probably all the traffic you are going to get to visit your site. However if you are seriously considering becoming an internet entrepreneur, find yourself a reputable web design company and an affordable hosting plan. Free hosting is not suitable for
internet entrepreneur so always Avoid Free Website and Hosting Deals.

There are three factors which I encourage my clients to keep in mind when selecting a website for their online business venture. The deciding factors when selecting your web design should be the ease of navigation and the suitability of the page layout to your content. Customers come to your site searching for a product, service, or information. If your site does not provide easy access to the content they want, they not going to hang around just to admire the design elements of your website. By selecting a layout suitable for the content you intend to place on your web pages, whether its product images and descriptions or informational content, like this article for example, you can save a lot of time and–if you intend to have your support staff setup your content– money as well.

The third factor is the basic web design. While many experts, and myself as well, believe customers are sub-consciously motivated by colors, (red encourages them to take action, blue promotes a sense of trust, yellow and orange, a sense of well being or contentment, etc), the basic design elements of your website such as the background colors, images, bullets, flash etc, are really a matter of personal preference.

If you are determined to succeed in the online marketplace, you’ll save yourself a lot of time and trouble if you start out right. Before you leap on that free website, free hosting offer, do your research. Read the fine print and see if the deal they are offering will meet your needs now and calculate the cost that you could incur if you have to exceed the allotment of services they provide for free in the future. If you want your own domain, then add the cost of the provider’s membership too. Talley the costs of “free provider’s services”, then set it aside and shop around a bit. Visit a web design company offering professionally designed websites for less than a hundred dollars and see what they have to offer. Take a look at the hosting plans available with all the features you need. Now, compare the costs of both options. Keep in mind that, as with any business, you will eventually have to invest a little money if you truly want to succeed.

If you are planning to use a free provider, then don’t bother purchasing a domain for your new site unless you intend to shell out the provider’s membership fee. Most free providers provide you with two membership options—free or paid. If you choose the free membership option, the provider will set up your URL for you website like this: FREE PROVIDER DOMAIN/YOUR USER ID, or even worse, like this: FREE PROVIDER DOMAIN/DIR/YOUR USER ID. Settle for either one these URLs, and you’ll be lucky to even get your site indexed by the search engines and directories at all. You see, many search engines and directories will not accept your website submissions if your URL contains a forward slash. Some major search engines and directories categorically refuse to accept submissions for websites hosted with free providers at all. Google rarely indexes sites hosted by free providers, and even more rarely gives the site a ranking greater than 0/10.

Even if you are lucky enough to land yourself a few customers for your site, the inclusion of a free provider’s domain in your URL can also have an adverse affect on your ability to get repeat customers for your site. Yourdomain.com is fairly easy for your customer to recall. Your provider domain.com/your user id would be extremely difficult for them to remember since they have probably never done business with your provider. .

Of course your free provider will be more than happy to setup your website under your own domain—provided you pay their membership fee and purchase the domain yourself to boot. Sort of defeats your purpose of saving a few bucks, doesn’t it?

They are not providing free hosting out of the goodness of their hearts, my friend. Read that fine print again. The majority of free providers offer limited amounts of web space, bandwidth and features. Better check the number of web pages you’re allowed to setup under your free account while you’re at it, because some providers set a ridiculously low limit. If you exceed whatever limits your free provider allows, you’ll have to pay their membership fee and/or purchase one of their hosting plans.